Note: You need to enable scripting and Javascript in your browser settings to best view and navigate our website. Otherwise, use our keyboard navigation and search page. For keyboard tabbing on this page you can bypass the top menu bar navigation and jump to the page sidebar navigation (if applicable), or jump to the page body. Our print link for screen media is scripted. Your computer's normal print command will print this page. Please contact us if you have difficulty in accessing our web pages.

In order to improve monitoring and enforcement efforts, the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission (NPAFC) scientists developed BASIS (Bering-Aleutian Salmon International Survey) during 2002, a comprehensive survey of the Bering Sea epipelagic ecosystem. BASIS was recently expanded to include other large marine ecosystems in the North Pacific and was renamed Bering Arctic Subarctic Integrated Survey. Historically, fishing for salmonids on the high seas has been conducted using driftnets. BASIS was designed to improve the understanding of salmon ecology in the Bering Sea and to clarify mechanisms linking recent changes in ocean conditions with salmon resources in the Bering Sea. The BASIS Working Group develops research questions every five years to pursue based on discussions by organizations, government agencies, and universities included at the BASIS Symposium. Each year, NMFS scientists provide salmon ocean ecology data to the NPAFC Committee on Science Research and Statistics (CSRS); these data are used by the NPAFC Committee on Enforcement (ENFO) for their deliberations on where to focus enforcement effort within the Convention Zone.

Section 206 of the Magnuson-Stevens Act addresses impacts of high seas driftnet on marine resources outside of the nations' economic exclusive zones (EEZ). Specifically, Section 206.b.1 states that the continued use of large-scale driftnets beyond the EEZ of any nation is a destructive fishing practice that poses a threat to living marine resources of the world’s oceans, including but not limited to the North and South Pacific Ocean and the Bering Sea; and Section 206.b.4 states that increased efforts, including reliable observer data and enforcement mechanisms, are needed to monitor, assess, control, and reduce the adverse impact of large-scale driftnet fishing on living marine resources.

Convention area for the North Pacific Anadromous Fish Commission shown in dark blu.

The Convention prohibits direct fishing for anadromous fish (chum, coho, pink, sockeye, Chinook, and cherry salmon, and steelhead trout) in the Convention Area. The incidental taking of anadromous fish is to be minimized to the maximum extent practicable, and the retention of anadromous fish taken incidentally during fishing activity directed at non-anadromous fish in prohibited, and any such anadromous fish shall be returned immediately to the sea.